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Author

Valby van Schijndel

Bio: Valby van Schijndel is an academic researcher from University of Potsdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Zircon & Craton. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 14 publications receiving 193 citations. Previous affiliations of Valby van Schijndel include University of Gothenburg & Stellenbosch University.
Topics: Zircon, Craton, Geochronology, Terrane, Geology

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a combined microbeam study of U-Pb, Lu-Hf in zircon from metasedimentary and magmatic rocks of the well-exposed Rehoboth Basement Inlier (RBI) provides new constraints on the crustal evolution of the region.

52 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, microbeam dating of detrital zircon is used to characterize the crustal development history of the Rehoboth Province of southern Africa, showing that there were at least three episodes of crustal evolution at 2.98-2.7 Ga, 2.05-1.2 and 1.9 Ga, corresponding to the 1863±10 Ma Elim Formation.
Abstract: Abstract The African continental crust was assembled by a series of orogenies over a period of billions of years mainly in Precambrian times. Tracing the build-up history of this stable crust is not always straightforward due to multiphase deformation and regions with poor outcrop. Episodes of metamorphism and magmatism associated with multiple Wilson cycles are recorded in zircons, which found their way into sediments derived from the hinterland. Dating of zircon populations in detrital rocks can hence provide age spectra which reflect the metamorphic and magmatic events of the region. Microbeam dating of detrital zircon is used to characterize the crustal development history of the Rehoboth Province of southern Africa. We investigated a quartzite of the Late Palaeo-Early Mesoproterozoic Billstein Formation, formed in a continental basin, and a quartz-feldspar arenite layer of the late Mesoproterozoic Langberg Formation conglomerates, immature sediments formed within a felsic volcanic system (both close to Rehoboth Town). The combined data indicate three episodes of crustal evolution in the Rehoboth Province. The oldest phase is only documented in the Billstein quartzite by three 2.98–2.7 Ga Archaean zircons. A Palaeoproterozoic phase between 2.2 and 1.9 Ga is older than any known exposures of the Rehoboth Province. The Billstein quartzite shows a main peak at 1.87 Ga, corresponding to the 1863±10 Ma Elim Formation. The Langberg sample reflects magmatism related to the entire Namaqua–Natal Wilson cycle between c. 1.32 and 1.05 Ga. The absence of zircons of that age range in the Billstein quartzite indicates a pre-Namaqua age for the Billstein Formation. Our data shows that there were at least three episodes of crustal development at 2.98–2.7 Ga, 2.05–1.75 and 1.32–1.1 Ga. We have documented the existence of a previously unrecognized 2.98–2.7 Ga Archaean crustal component, which was probably exposed in the Rehoboth Province during the Palaeoproterozoic and thus indicates a much longer geological history for the Rehoboth Province than previously known.

42 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 2011-Lithos
TL;DR: In this article, a new source of information about what lies beneath the Kalahari sands was found, based on microbeam U-Pb zircon dating of the granitic cobbles, which testify to the presence of 2500 to 2900 Ma Archaean trondhjemitic and granitic crust beneath the KG.

32 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a number of gabbro-granite hybrid rocks exposed in the Great Escarpment between the coastal Namib desert and the inland plateau of Namibia were used to investigate the geochronology of these rocks.

32 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the age of the Hartley Formation of the Olifantshoek Group has been estimated to be between 1.6 ± 1.4 Ma and 1.2 ± 0.1 Ma.
Abstract: The Palaeoproterozoic Hartley Formation in the Olifantshoek Group was deposited in one of the rift-related Waterberg (sensu lato) red bed basins which formed on the Kaapvaal Craton after the 2.05 Ga Bushveld intrusions and coeval thermal event. The age of these basins is not well constrained due to the shortage of directly dateable rock types. The Hartley Formation contains rare quartz-porphyry lavas interbedded with the dominant basalts and these provide the means to date the formation by analyses of zircon. In this work zircon from one sample has been dated by six Th-U-Pb methods, namely Laser Ablation ICP Quadrupole Mass Spectrometry, Laser Ablation ICP High-resolution Mass Spectrometry, Laser Ablation ICP Multicollector Mass Spectrometry U-Pb (also Lu-Hf), Nordsim Ion probe U-Pb and Th-Pb; and Krogh method ID-TIMS. Our precise ages give a combined age of 1915.2 ± 1.1 Ma. Including one published ion probe date from the only other known occurrence of quartz porphyry, the results only agree if the quoted analytical errors are increased by 20%, which gives a combined result of 1915.6 ± 1.4 Ma. This is considered a reliable, precise and accurate age for the Hartley Formation and supersedes the published Kober method 207Pb/206Pb age of 1928 ± 4 Ma. The new Lu-Hf zircon data, supported by published whole rock Sm-Nd and Rb-Sr data, suggests that both the dominant basalts and the rare quartz porphyries of the Hartley Formation were derived from mafic source rocks which had been in the crustal domain from Archaean times. By contrast with the intracratonic rifts of the other Waterberg Basins, the Olifantshoek Supergroup reflects the development of a western passive margin as the Archaean Kaapvaal Craton rifted and drifted. This was followed by accretion of the Rehoboth Province along the Kalahari Line, accompanied by the development of the east-vergent Kheis Province thrust complex. This created a larger cratonic block against which the 1.2 Ga collisions of Namaqua-Natal terranes impacted. The Kheis Province now yields ~1.17 Ma cooling ages, reflecting the Namaqua collisions, but the true age of the Kheis event is still enigmatic.

25 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
Xiaohui Zhang1, Lingling Yuan1, Fuhong Xue1, Xin Yan1, Qian Mao1 
TL;DR: A-type granitoids constitute volumetrically minor but genetically important building blocks of most post-Archean continental landmasses on Earth and their diversified genesis encapsulates key information for ascertaining critical geodynamic controls on continental crustal formation and differentiation as mentioned in this paper.

131 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a revised model for the Neoproterozoic evolution of Western Gondwana is presented, in which geological, geochronological and isotopic data are integrated in order to present a revised approach to infer the evolution of most Western gondwana cratons.
Abstract: Geological, geochronological and isotopic data are integrated in order to present a revised model for the Neoproterozoic evolution of Western Gondwana. Although the classical geodynamic scenario assumed for the period 800–700 Ma is related to Rodinia break-up and the consequent opening of major oceanic basins, a significantly different tectonic evolution can be inferred for most Western Gondwana cratons. These cratons occupied a marginal position in the southern hemisphere with respect to Rodinia and recorded subduction with back-arc extension, island arc development and limited formation of oceanic crust in internal oceans. This period was thus characterized by increased crustal growth in Western Gondwana, resulting from addition of juvenile continental crust along convergent margins. In contrast, crustal reworking and metacratonization were dominant during the subsequent assembly of Gondwana. The Rio de la Plata, Congo-Sao Francisco, West African and Amazonian cratons collided at ca. 630–600 Ma along the West Gondwana Orogen. These events overlap in time with the onset of the opening of the Iapetus Ocean at ca. 610–600 Ma, which gave rise to the separation of Baltica, Laurentia and Amazonia and resulted from the final Rodinia break-up. The East African/Antarctic Orogen recorded the subsequent amalgamation of Western and Eastern Gondwana after ca. 580 Ma, contemporaneously with the beginning of subduction in the Terra Australis Orogen along the southern Gondwana margin. However, the Kalahari Craton was lately incorporated during the Late Ediacaran–Early Cambrian. The proposed Gondwana evolution rules out the existence of Pannotia, as the final Gondwana amalgamation postdates latest connections between Laurentia and Amazonia. Additionally, a combination of introversion and extroversion is proposed for the assembly of Gondwana. The contemporaneous record of final Rodinia break-up and Gondwana assembly has major implications for the supercontinent cycle, as supercontinent amalgamation and break-up do not necessarily represent alternating episodic processes but overlap in time.

109 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, detrital zircon data from Phanerozoic sedimentary cover sequences in South Africa suggest that this source-to-sink relationship has been obscured by repeated events of sedimentary recycling.

81 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the age distribution of detrital zircon U-Pb was found to correspond to the ages of prominent crustal components within the respective cratons.

75 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the allochthony of the Nico Perez Terrane and Piedra Alta Terrane was shown to be formed during Archean episodic crustal growth and this crust underwent significant Paleo- and Neoproterozoic crustal reworking at ca.2.2 −2.0, 1.7 and 0.6 ǫ.

72 citations